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Marlins eye postseason honors for Fernandez

Marlins eye postseason honors for Fernandez

8/3/13: Mike Redmond talks about Jose Fernandez's brilliant rookie campaign and the possibility of an innings limit for the young pitcher

By Joe Frisaro and Joe Morgan
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MLB.com |

MIAMI -- From 2003-09, three Marlins captured National League Rookie of the Year honors.

The organization is hoping to add to the list in 2013.

Jose Fernandez, the team's dominating right-hander, is making a case to receive serious consideration.

It is hard to overlook what Fernandez has been doing, especially of late.

On Friday night, two days after turning 21, Fernandez struck out 14 while scattering three hits over eight scoreless innings in Miami's 10-0 win over the Indians. In his prior outing, he struck out 13 Pirates.

The 14 strikeouts are a Marlins' rookie record.

According to Elias, Fernandez is the fifth pitcher under the age of 22 since 1900 to record consecutive 13-plus strikeout games. He joins Dennis Eckersley (1976), Dwight Gooden (1984), Jose Rijo (1986) and Kerry Wood (1998).

Among National League rookie starting pitchers, Fernandez has the most strikeouts (138) and best ERA (2.54).

The Marlins are starting to campaign for Fernandez to be part of Rookie of the Year talk.

"He should be; I'm biased," manager Mike Redmond said. "I've watched this kid over the course of the year. I can't imagine there being a better rookie than him."

The presumed frontrunner is outfielder Yasiel Puig of the Dodgers.

Like Fernandez, Puig is from Cuba.

But unlike Fernandez, Puig is expected to finish out the season.

The Marlins have set a strict innings limit for Fernandez, which is around 170.

Fernandez is at 127 2/3 right now, and if he averages seven innings per start, he could make five more starts and have his season shut down after Aug. 30.

Would missing the final month of the season hurt Fernandez's chances?

"It could, but that's not on him," Redmond said. "I don't think that's going to affect his life if he wins Rookie of the Year or not. But he definitely deserves that honor, the way he's going right now. That's been amazing."

Fernandez is being handled cautiously because he made the leap from Class A to the big leagues at age 20. Redmond and pitching coach Chuck Hernandez have carefully monitored the rookie's innings.

"He knows that Chuck and I have his best interests in mind," Redmond said. "As hard as that is for all of us, because we want to see him go out and pitch. But it's going to be better for him down the road."